6533b860fe1ef96bd12c376d

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A nuclear juvenile hormone-binding protein from larvae of Manduca sexta: a putative receptor for the metamorphic action of juvenile hormone

S. R. Palli K. Touhara Jean-philippe Charles B. C. Bonning J. Atkinson S. C. Trowell Kiyoshi Hiruma W. G. Goodman T. Kyriakides Glen D. Prestwich

subject

MaleMoths/growth & development/*metabolism/physiologyBase SequenceMetamorphosisPolymerase Chain Reaction/methodsSesquiterpenes/metabolismMolecular Sequence DataDNABiological/*physiologyTritiumJuvenile Hormones/metabolismMolecular WeightKineticsIsomerismOligodeoxyribonucleotidesLarvaAnimalsComplementary/isolation & purificationInsect ProteinsAmino Acid SequenceCarrier Proteins/genetics/isolation & purification/*metabolism

description

0027-8424 (Print) Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.; A 29-kDa nuclear juvenile hormone (JH)-binding protein from the epidermis of Manduca sexta larvae was purified by using the photoaffinity analog for JH II ([3H]epoxyhomofarnesyldiazoacetate) and partially sequenced. A 1.1-kb cDNA was isolated by using degenerate oligonucleotide primers for PCR based on these sequences. The cDNA encoded a 262-amino acid protein that showed no similarity with other known proteins, except for short stretches of the interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein, rhodopsin, and human nuclear protein p68. Recombinant baculovirus containing this cDNA made a 29-kDa protein that was covalently modified by [3H]epoxyhomofarnesyldiazoacetate and specifically bound the natural enantiomer of JH I (Kd = 10.7 nM). This binding was inhibited by the natural JHs but not by methoprene. Immunocytochemical analysis showed localization of this 29-kDa protein to epidermal nuclei. Both mRNA and protein are present during the intermolt periods; during the larval molt, the mRNA disappears but the protein persists. Later when cells become pupally committed, both the mRNA and protein disappear with a transient reappearance near pupal ecdysis. The properties of this protein are consistent with its being the receptor necessary for the antimetamorphic effects of JH.

https://hal.science/hal-00451554